Player to Watch: Sokratis Papastathopoulos was one of the best defenders in the Bundesliga this year at Borussia Dortmund. Given the dearth of quality central defenders across the board in world soccer, expect the 27-year-old’s name to hit the transfer mill soon enough.

Tactics/Style: Greece is a typical European 4-2-3-1 team. Dimitris Salpingidis and Giorgos Samaras will play out wide to support Kostas Mitroglou. This isn’t a team that scores a lot; just 12 in 10 qualifiers. In two games against tiny Lichtenstein, Greece scored three total goals. (Lichtenstein conceded 22 in its other eight qualifiers.) Not helping matters either is Mitroglou, who was injured and ineffective — and that’s putting it kindly — following a big-money move from Olympiacos to relegated Fulham in January.

Which Greek forward looks like he spent the most time touring as a roadie with Ozzfest last summer: Kostas Mitroglou or Giorgos Samaras?

Miscellany: 37-year-old captain Giorgos Karagounis, last seen wheezing around for relegated Fulham, is a remaining link to Greece’s Euro 2004 team. … The World Cup is the first international tournament at the senior level for 28-year-old keeper Orestis Karnezis. … Fanis Gekas is 33 years old and among the most well-traveled players in the World Cup, having played for 12 different clubs since 1998. … Greece remains relatively high on the UEFA hog, living off its upset win in Euro 2004 which has helped it in qualification seeding for the last couple World Cups and Euros — that mathematical bonus should fade shortly after this tournament concludes. … And now for something completely different.

The unofficial Greek World Cup anthem:

(Sorry.)

Last word: Let’s leave the it to these two dudes to explain Greece’s likely World Cup fate: